An important note on funding the database:

JRI-Poland fundraising is shtetl-specific so that you can direct your donations to support indexing records for your towns.
Learn More.

(Please note: Donations made to JewishGen do not support the indexing of records that you can search in the JRI-Poland database.)

Registering for Database Access

The JRI-Poland database offers free search capabilities not available anywhere else. To protect the data
from unlawful use, JRI-Poland’s database requires login to view search results. JRI-Poland utilizes the JewishGen registration system so
that researchers may use the same login name and password to access both sites.

If you have already registered…

you can proceed to search database. If you
are not already logged in with JewishGen you will be asked to do so.

If you have not already registered…

Click here to fill out our registration form (hosted on the
JewishGen website). After you have logged in, proceed to search database.

Understanding Search Options

It is possible to search by surname, given name, and town or a combination
of these. In addition, you can search by year ranges and record types. You can also specify a
radius of, say, 50 or 100 kilometers from certain geographical coordinates. This can still focus your search, but also yield results
from several different Gubernias.

Each Search Result table has a heading that identifies that town as a Town of Registration, one where vital records were
registered. If you search for a town as the only search parameter, you will only receive search results that list the name of that town in
another town's records. You will not receive results from its town of registration records. If you search for a town in combination with another
parameter and use AND (see below), such as surname or given name, you will receive results from both the town of registration and from
mentions of that town in another town's records.

When the Town name is known, it is recommended that you use the exact spelling of the town. For towns now in the Ukraine but formerly in
Austrian Galicia, use the former Polish spelling.

Multiple Parameter Searches

You can search the database for up to four parameters. You can use the Operators AND or OR. Use of AND results in all
entered parameters included in the response to your search. Use of OR results in one of the entered parameters included in the response
to your search. For example:

Search for surname KATZ, AND given name Chaim, AND town Lodz, which produces results for Chaim KATZ in the Lodz records
or any other town records where Chaim KATZ and Lodz are referenced. (This will include mentions of Chaim as the father in a record, when
such information is available.)

Search the surname KATZ AND surname LEWIN, which produces results where an entry includes both KATZ and LEWIN.

Search for surnames KATZ OR COHEN, which produces results where either KATZ or COHEN are entered.

Search for given name Malka AND town Lodz produces results where both Malka and Lodz are referenced.

Search for given name Judka AND Lejb produces results where both Judka and Lejb are referenced (not only the double name Judka Lejb).

Search for given name Judka OR Lejb produces results where either Judka or Lejb are referenced.

2. Search Parameters: Search Types

You must select from the Search Types drop down menu to choose a method for interpreting the data. Choose from the following:

Sounds Like: This is a Daitch-Mokotoff soundex search. Daitch-Mokotoff converts the phonetic sound of the name or town
into a numeric code. Click here for more information.
Soundex searches can bring up many obviously false positives. To force the appearance of a specific letter in the search results
rather than others with the same Soundex code, place square brackets [ ] around that letter. Example- a search for [BO]GANT will not
result in any entries starting with WA as in WAGANT.

Starts with: You must enter at least 3 letters to do a search. Example – a search for ROZEN would yield results for
ROZEN, ROZENZWAJG, ROZENBAUM, ROZENFELD, etc.

is Exactly (SURNAMES): Search for the exact spelling of the name you wish to have displayed. A search for ROZENZWAJG would yield
results with only that exact spelling. Other spellings with the same soundex would not appear in results, i.e. ROSENZWAJG or ROZENZWEJG.
Note: Wildcards (* or ?) represent letters or groups of letters of which may or may not be a part of the name. Example –
if you were uncertain whether your family name was ROZENZWAJG or ROZENWAJG (having different soundex codes) search ROZEN*WAJG.

Fuzzy: Search for names or towns which are different from your request by 1 letter or pair of transposed letters.

Fuzzier: Search for names or towns which are different from your request by 1 or 2 letters or pairs of transposed letters.

Fuzziest: Search for names or towns which are different from your request by 1/3rd of the length of your request letters. eg for surname KONOPIATY (length 9) results which are different from your request by up to 3 letters will be shown, for surname FRISCHWASSER (length 12) results which are different from your request by up to 4 letters will be shown.

3. Geographical Region

Searching by a geographical region is one way to focus your search in the general area where your ancestors lived. (To narrow your search
further, use a town’s geographical coordinates to set the central point for a radius search.)

Looking up your town in JRI-Poland's Your Town section will provide the name of the Gubernia where your town
was located during the period when the majority of the records were recorded. For Galician researchers, there is currently no master list of
Wojewodztwa where your towns were located.

Gubernia and Wojewodztwa where entries in the JRI-Poland database can be found:

Country/Region

Gubernia/ Wojewodztwa

Main Towns

Congress Poland

Kalisz

Kalisz, Kolo, Piatek, Wieruszow

Kielce

Checiny, Kielce, Stopnica

Lomza

Grajewo, Lomza, Ostrow Mazowiecka, Szczuczyn, Tykocin

Lublin

Chelm, Kazimierz Dolny, Lublin, Zamosc

Piotrkow

Czestochowa, Lodz, Piotrkow, Tomaszow Mazowiecka

Plock

Ciechanow, Mlawa, Plock, Plonsk, Przasnysz

Radom

Ilza, Opatow, Radom

Siedlce

Biala Podlaski, Siedlce, Sokolow Podlaski

Suwalki

Augustow, Mariampol, Sejny, Suwalki

Warszawa

Gora Kalwaria, Pultusk, Radzymin, Warszawa

Russian Pale of Settlement

Grodno

Bialystok

Volhynia

Kremenets

Austrian Galicia

Krakow

Krakow, Tarnow

Lwow

Drohobycz, Lwow, Przemysl, Rzeszow, Sambor

Stanislawow

Horodenka, Kolomyja, Stanislawow, Stryj

Tarnopol

Brzezany, Jagielnica, Skalat, Tarnopol, Zloczow

Prussia

Bytom, Gliwice, Wroclaw, Torun

4. Radius Search

Our ancestors were mobile and you may discover that some of your family moved to a nearby sztetl or even many miles from your ancestral town.
You can search a radius from the latitude/longitude of your town with a distance of 1 mile to 100 miles. Locate the coordinates of your town
using the JewishGen Gazetteer.

This radius search allows you to cross the boundaries of Gubernia and Wojewodztwa, giving you a more flexible
tool than using the Geographical Region restriction.

To search by radius:

Enter the Latitude and Longitude of your town (example 5145, 1928 for Lodz).

Select a radius of from 1 to 100 miles. (Entering 0 miles will not yield results)

Geographical Region must be set to "All Regions"

5. Entry Range, Year Range and Record Types

These options allow a more focused search based on upload date, year of record and record types.

Entry Range: Select "ALL entries" for a full search of all data or Select a date to limit the search results to data added after
a given month and year.

Year Range: Fill in years to limit search results to specific years of records. This is particularly useful in finding your family when there
are many families with a similar surname in your town.

Example- Entering 1867 to 1882 would focus the search on entries recorded in those years. When searching for your ancestor’s
year of birth, for example, always broaden the scope of the search. Births were often registered many years after the date of the event, and the
ancestor may have been born earlier than family lore indicates.

Record Types: Select from this drop down menu to narrow your search based on Births, Marriages, Divorces, Deaths, Burials or Census/Book of
Residents results.

6. Output Options

Output Format: Select the format in which your data will be displayed. If you have no preference leave the default "A table" selected.

Search Strategies

The database search features provide an invaluable tool – both for expanding your overview or focusing searches and solving dilemmas
associated with getting too many results when a search involves large towns and common surnames.

Please review the following tips to insure you are getting the most from your JRI-Poland database searches:

1. Surnames and towns with accented characters

If your ancestral surname is sometimes written with accented characters, do NOT enter these accented characters
in the surname or town fields. If you do try to search using accented characters, you will not get back the results you are expecting!

There are a variety of accented characters used in Polish surnames. In some cases, they sufficiently modify the pronunciation of a name
to also change the Daitch-Mokotoff Soundex code for that name.

For example, a vowel that contains an ogonek (a little hook) beneath it causes the vowel to be pronounced with an "n" or an "m." Example:
the "e" in Ostrolęka is written in Polish with an ogonek under the "e" and the town name is pronounced Ostrolenka.

If your town name or surname has an ogonek, to get best results:

Do NOT search by including the ogonek in the name. Instead, convert the name with the ogonek to the phonetic sound, then do a
Daitch-Mokotoff soundex search.

Do NOT do an exact surname search.

When you do a Daitch-Mokotoff soundex search, the results will show entries for all soundex variations of the name. Therefore if you
search for the town WENGROW or the surname WENGROWSKI it will provide results for:

WENGROW
WEGRÓW
WENGROWSKI
WEGROWSKI

Or if you search for PIONTEK you will get results for

PIANTEK
PIENTEK
PIATAK
PIONTEK
PIETEK
PIEMTEK
PIAMTEK

It is important to remember that the data entry was done based on what we saw or thought we saw in the index. Therefore, if the 19th
century clerk did not put the ogonek in a name when he wrote it out, we did not do so either. There may be versions of the name in our
database that do not contain the ogonek and are not phoneticized with an "n" or "m". Therefore it is best also to
search for the name without including the ogonek in the spelling.

For example, a town search for WEGROW or surname search for WEGROWSKI will get you some listings for those names spelled without the
ogonek. But it will not get you listings for WENGROW or WENGROWSKI.

The ogonek is the ONLY accented character for which one should search phonetically in the JRI-Poland database.

For example, the name JASKOŁKA with a slashed L is pronounced JASKUWKA in Poland. But you should search for JASKOLKA, not the Polish
phonetic JASKUWKA, even though the name contains the slashed L.

2. Searching Surname in a specific town

There are two different methods of accomplishing this. Let's search for JASKOLKA from Lomza.

Method 1: Enter the surname JASKOLKA and then skip down to Search by Distance from Town of Registration? Central Coordinates. Enter
Radius = 1 mile. Look up the latitude and longitude of Lomza, Poland using the JewishGen Gazetteer and enter those numbers (5311, 2205). Click Start Search.

Method 2: Enter the surname JASKOLKA as the first parameter and enter the town Lomza as the second parameter. Make sure that "Match
ALL of the above (logical AND)" is selected. Click Start Search.

3. Narrowing your search when there are too many results

There are a few ways to narrow your search. You need to select one of the following that best matches your search.

Perform a radius search of 10, 20, or 30 miles from the town where your target person lived. Click here for more information.

Perform a multiple parameter search using Surname and given name or surname and town. Click here for more information.

4. Searching data that is not specific to a geographical area

To obtain results from these projects and similar ones, you must search the entire database - do not narrow your search
by geographic region or coordinates. You must search the database and ensure that Geographical Region is set to "All Regions".

5. Reviewing the search results tables

It is important to review ALL the search results, table by table.

There may be references to your towns in other town records.
a. If you are really only interested in one town, Lodz for example,
then specify Lodz in the search. ALL records returned will be for Lodz.
b. If you are interested in a family from Lodz and with connections to Lodz,
do NOT specify the town name and be sure to check search results
for ALL towns.

Examine ALL results; do not stop halfway through and ASSUME there is nothing more of interest.

Note: in some cases, the town names in the search results tables will not appear alphabetically.

Town columns in search results tables may show only the initial of the town name in the table header.I.e. "G" = Grajewo.

6. Surname Distribution Mapper

The Surname Distribution Mapper is a unique tool to supplement traditional data searches. It helps researchers understand graphically where
their family names first appeared in the 19th century records and spread throughout Poland by decades from the early 1800s into the first part
of the 20th century.